ScienceAlert on MSN
Rising CO2 Could Be Altering Our Blood Chemistry, Study Suggests
The rise of carbon dioxide (CO2) in Earth's atmosphere is detectable and measurable in the blood of its human inhabitants, a ...
SHANNON, CLARE, IRELAND, February 27, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Announcing a new publication from Opto-Electronic ...
Sodium-ion batteries are emerging as a promising alternative to lithium-based systems, but their performance has long been limited by unstable anode materials and poor initial efficiency. A recent ...
After applying advanced evolutionary modeling techniques, the researchers report that about one-third of the long-proposed “linguistic universals”—patterns believed to exist across all languages—show ...
In addition to funding availability, the federal government has limited the ability of researchers to receive reimbursement ...
A Rolling Stone investigation uncovered irregularities in the ethics review of a $1.6 million research grant to examine the ...
New Scientist on MSN
Intermittent fasting probably doesn’t help with weight loss
Intermittent fasting appears to be no better than doing nothing when it comes to helping people who are overweight or have obesity lose weight ...
The popular eating strategy is about as effective as doing nothing to lose weight, according to a review of several clinical trials ...
Opinion
CNET on MSNOpinion
AI Slop Is Destroying the Internet. These Are the People Fighting to Save It
AI Slop Is Destroying the Internet. These Are the People Fighting to Save It ...
What follows is an accounting of what actually happened when intelligence became abundant. Not because the technology underperformed, but because humans are resilient.
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